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Daniel Bogorff working to recovery a mooring onto deck of Atlantis.

Daniel Bogorff working to recovery a mooring onto deck of Atlantis.
Daniel Bogorff working to recovery a mooring onto deck of Atlantis.
Daniel Bogorff working to recovery a mooring onto deck of Atlantis.
Daniel Bogorff working to recovery a mooring onto deck of Atlantis.
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174922
Toole, John M.
Daniel Bogorff working to recovery a mooring onto deck of Atlantis.
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10/28/2010
graphics/John_Toole_Line_W/_IMS9678.JPG
Atlantis cruise AT-17, John Toole Chief Scientist, Line W mooring recovery and deployment.
Image of The Day caption:
Engineering assistant Daniel Bogorff works to clean a fouled (and furry-looking) Ultramoor Data Capsule Magazine that had just been recovered from its mooring station on Line W between Woods Hole and Bermuda. Moored instruments, buoys, and rigging attract a wide variety of organisms, including algae, bryozoans, and mussels, and are sometimes damaged or disabled by the hangers-on. Usually, a wipe-down by hand and a freshwater rinse get the equipment clean, but on occasion the organisms hold on so tightly they have to be scrubbed off. This week WHOI is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Buoy Group's first mooring.
Photo by John Toole
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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